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Muhammad Zain Attiq celebrates this
Maryam Arooj
• 2nd
Working on Agentic AI | Hands-on experience with n8n & SDK | Pursuing Agentic AI Course at PIAIC | BSc in Computer Science at GCUF | Exploring Generative AI, NLM & LLM
1h •
Alhamdulillah! I’m excited to share that I have successfully completed Prompt & Context Engineering – Level 1 Developer from Presidential Initiative for Artificial Intelligence & Computing.
Grateful for this learning journey and looking forward to building impactful AI solutions 🚀
Rauf ur Rahim sir
Muhammad Usman Akbar sir
Muhammad Junaid Shaukat sir
Muhammad Zain Attiq sir
Muhammad Abdullah sir
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Fahad Nasir
• 2nd
that marketer who is a linkedin nerd. sometimes helps b2b tech agencies win global clients through linkedin. physically in Pakistan but spiritually (and practically) 100% remote. founder @ linkedb2be
Promoted by linkedb2be
I find it really hard to admit I'm wrong. So I run everything through layers of filters, before ever saying it. But I see most people on LinkedIn don't have the same problem. They'll make strong claims and share extreme POVs for years & then backtrack on them with ease. They will mock people who do certain things and then do it themselves when it suits them. And there are tens of hook templates to help them out. - "I was wrong about [X]." - "For years, I told people to [old advice]. I do not believe that anymore." - "I used to laugh at people who [new behavior]. Now I am one of them." - "I usually don't talk about [personal life], [politics], [religion] on LinkedIn BUT...." - "Last year I said [X] is dead, this year it is my best channel" The fact that they have been WRONG about something for a long time does not seem to bother them much. Even if they had mocked people, started heated arguments around it, preached the wrong thing to 100s or 1000s of people. They just switch like it is nothing, when it suits them or when they "see the light". And what irks me even more is that they usually play it like, I am amazing for being able to admit my mistake in public and it shows I have grown. So give me a standing ovation. More often than not, they actually get it too. And they continue giving strong advice about their new found belief... If I had to do the same thing, I'd die of shame. If I had to backtrack on a strong POV, my post will be a pure apology. I'd feel like I don't have the authority to make such claims again. I'd try to fix the damage somehow. But I'm not just here to share a rant. I have actually thought this through and learned somethings (growth: standing ovation please?) These are the most important ones (for me) 1. I take myself and my advice too seriously, some of it might be integrity but a lot of it is just ego 2. People don't remember most of the things I have said last week, let alone things I have said months or years ago. 3. Some people are just shady, have no integrity whatsoever and will do whatever suits them in that moment. I should never want to be like them. 4. No matter how sure someone seems about an idea or POV, look hard for the context and nuance around it. Find the ones that are applicable to you and try to work on them. Don't become this kinda shameless person for reach or engagement. Don't let the strong POVs of overconfident people hold you back. And definitely don't stand in your own way.
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Wahab Zafar commented on this
Azra Rasheed
• 3rd+
LinkedIn Strategist for Busy Coaches || I Help You Escape Content Burnout & Attract 15–20 High-Quality Leads in 90 Days || Ghostwriter
7h • Edited •
Someone spelled my name wrong in a DM today. And I couldn't stop myself from correcting them. Idk what, but it triggers something inside me. (especially when it's the very first DM) That's why whenever I send DMs to prospects, I read their name spelling at least 1000 times before hitting send. (okay fine, I'm exaggerating. But you got the point.) How many of you do the same? People have called me 'aara', 'azar' and what not. Come on guys, it's such a small name😭
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So true! 🤣 When message so good, but you're confused is it for me? 😂
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Sana Ullah
• 2nd
BSCS Nutech’27| React JS | Node JS |AI Enthusiast |1x Oracle Certified |1x Kaggle Certified | Git | GitHub | C++ SQL Python
10h •
🌙 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝟯𝟯-𝗬𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗣𝘂𝗹𝘀𝗲: 𝗪𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗱𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗠𝗲𝗲𝘁𝘀 𝗚𝗹𝗼𝗯𝗮𝗹 𝗥𝗵𝘆𝘁𝗵𝗺
The 33-year Ramadan cycle isn’t just a calendar phenomenon — it’s a masterclass in astronomy, economic rhythm, and human resilience. For forward-thinking leaders and global investors, it represents the pulse of a $2T+ consumer ecosystem spanning 1.9 billion people.
From the rare “Double Ramadan” in 2030 to the gradual shift in fasting hours toward 2047, these cycles meaningfully reshape consumer behavior, hospitality demand, capital flows, philanthropy (Zakat), and cross-border trade.
📊 The Investor Lens:
• Cultural Intelligence as Alpha — Understanding Ramadan’s shifting timing across MENA and Southeast Asia markets is no longer optional; it’s a strategic advantage.
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#CulturalIntelligence #Ramadan2026 #MarketTrends #Leadership
#GlobalMarkets
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Laiba Khan likes this
Zeeshan Ali
• 2nd
“--Web Developer--” @Wapex Institute Faisalabad | HTML 5 | CSS 3 | Bootstrap 5 | JavaScript | jQuery | Ajax-PHP | PHP | OOP-PHP | Laravel 12 | Python | Django | Learning Agentic Ai | Ai automation
2h •
I am happy to announce that I have successfully earned my Prompt Engineering and Context Engineering Certificate. 🎉
This achievement reflects my growing expertise in designing intelligent AI interactions, crafting effective prompts, structuring contextual frameworks, and building systems that generate accurate, reliable, and scalable outputs.
Through this learning journey, I strengthened my understanding of how to optimize large language models, improve response quality, and implement context-driven AI solutions for real-world applications.
I’m excited to continue building advanced AI systems and automation workflows that combine innovation with practical impact.
#AI #ArtificialIntelligence #PromptEngineering #ContextEngineering #LLM #MachineLearning #AIAutomation #TechInnovation #GenerativeAI
Prompt and Context Engineering Certification
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Esha Fayyaz and 400 other connections follow Programmers Force
Ever wondered why the finance team exists?
Drop your wrong answers below. 👀
#programmersforce #wronganswersonly #financeteam
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world best trusted foundation Saylani Welfare Trust :)
Maulana Bashir Farooq Qadri shares his insightful thoughts during Shan e Ramazan on ARY Digital transmission. A special moment from the show highlighting his wisdom and guidance.
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Abdul Wasay likes this
💻 Python Developers: Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, Data Engineering, & Programming
Rishi Sharma • 2nd
6h •
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Abdul Wasay and 753 others reacted
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